Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

‘Unbelievab­le’ snowfall blankets parts of Northeast

- Mary Esch

GLENVILLE, N.Y. – The Northeast’s first whopper snowstorm of the season buried parts of upstate New York under more than 3 feet of snow, broke records in Massachuse­tts and Pennsylvan­ia, and left snowplow drivers struggling to clear the roads.

“It was a very difficult, fast storm, and it dropped an unbelievab­le amount of snow,” Tom Coppola, highway superinten­dent in charge of maintainin­g 100 miles of roads in the Albany suburb of Glenville, said Thursday morning. “It’s to the point where we’re having trouble pushing it with our plows.”

The storm dropped 30 inches on Glenville between 1 a.m. and 6 a.m. Thursday, leaving a silent scene of snow-clad trees, buried cars and heavily laden roofs when the sun peeked through at noon.

“If you do not have to be on the roads, please don’t travel,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said. He said there were more than 9,000 power outages, 600 accidents and two fatalities by midmorning Thursday.

Nearly 40 inches of snow fell in Binghamton, where the National Weather Service said the storm sets a new twoday snowfall record, eclipsing the previous record of 35.3 inches in March 2017.

In Ithaca, it took Fred Cullin, 23, more than an hour and a half to dig out of his steep, lakeside driveway that was packed with nearly 3 feet of snow piled up by plows.

“It was pretty crazy,” Cullin said. “Shoveling uphill, on ice, was definitely interestin­g.”

Much of Pennsylvan­ia’s western and central regions saw accumulati­ons in the double digits.

“Williamspo­rt Regional Airport made history,” the National Weather Service in State College said, reporting 24.7 inches of snow and breaking the previous record of 24.1 inches set there in January 1964.

Boston had more than 9 inches of snow early Thursday morning, breaking the previous record for the date of 6.4 inches in 2013. In Boston’s Seaport neighborho­od, the streets were mostly empty except for an army of workers snowblowin­g sidewalks in front of luxury apartment buildings, stores and office towers.

Xicheng Cai, 28, a consultant who lives and works in Seaport, was decked out in what he called his full polar gear including boots, windproof pants and ski goggles. “Wonderful,” he said of the snow. “This is what Christmas should look like.”

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